A simple method is presented for the determination
of individual rate constants for substrate hydrolysis by
serine proteases and other enzymes with similar catalytic
mechanism. The method does not require solvent perturbation
like viscosity changes, or solvent isotope effects, that
often compromise nonspecifically the activity of substrate
and enzyme. The rates of substrate diffusion into the active
site (k1), substrate dissociation
(k−1), acylation (k2),
and deacylation (k3) in the accepted mechanism
of substrate hydrolysis by serine proteases are derived from the
temperature dependence of the Michaelis–Menten parameters
kcat/Km and
kcat. The method also yields the
activation energies for these molecular events. Application
to wild-type and mutant thrombins reveals how the various
steps of the catalytic mechanism are affected by Na+
binding and site-directed mutations of the important residues
Y225 in the Na+ binding environment and L99
in the S2 specificity site. Extension of this method to
other proteases should enable the derivation of detailed
information on the kinetic and energetic determinants of
protease function.